The visit was the latest stage of a Russian initiative that started in a June meeting between President Vladimir Putin and Prince Mohammad in Moscow. followed by Putin’s hosting of talks with Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem. The Russian President reportedly proposed “a counter-terrorism alliance including Syria, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Jordan”,

Saudi politics has always been marked by wisdom and rationality, so how can you let yourselves be led by Qatar’s sheikhdom, which has played a subversive role in Tunisia, Libya, Egypt and elsewhere.

Who is Qatar to run Saudi politics and Arab politics?

Assad’s envoy said Syria and Saudi Arabia have always been “influential in the Arab system, and our relations were always good”, with cooperation “on many issues, especially in Lebanon”. Claiming that the regime’s “situation in Syria is strong” with “the Syrian army’s advances at many locations”, he concluded, “I hope that you will change your view and the way you are dealing with what is happening.”

Al-Akhbar’s summary of Prince Mohammad’s comments was brief, claiming the Defense Minister had expressed fears over Tehran’s rising influence on the Assad regime:

Our main issue with you, for some time, has been that you let yourselves be led by Iran, which is involved in a large [scale] conflict with us on the level of the [entire] region.

In Lebanon you allowed yourselves to be led by Hezbollah, which is aligned with Iran, and wants to control Lebanon and turn it in to an Iranian protectorate.

The Saudi Version

The official confirmed the talks with Mamlouk, but he said the Assad regime had given a distorted summary to as-Safir. He said Assad was trying to show — falsely — “that Saudi Arabia was planning for the meeting without the knowledge of its allies”.

He denied that Putin’s proposal of a Syrian-Saudi-Turkish-Jordanian anti-terrorism alliance. Instead, the source said Saudi Arabia had sought the talks with Mamlouk — held in Jeddah and including Russian officials — after Moscow accused the Saudis of “obstructing a political solution and fueling terrorism through supporting the opposition”.

Riyadh had seized the initiative, telling Moscow that it would “bring peace and satisfy the Syrians or show the true face of al-Assad to its Russian allies”.

In Jeddah, the Saudis said they and their allies “will stop supporting the Syrian Opposition provided that Iran, Hezbollah, and Shia militias get out of Syria, making “the conflict and the solution strictly Syrian”.

According to Al Arabiya, Mamlouk answered: “What do we do with Hezbollah? We need time to think!”

The Saudi official concluded that the meeting had not advanced any talks for a political resolution. However, they were successful because “this has shown the true face of al-Assad regime and its lack of credibility and proved that terrorism in Syria is not perpetrated”.

The Story Disappears

However, this morning the Saudi regime appears to have had a change of heart about putting forth its side of the story. Al Arabiya’s account has disappeared, with no further comment on its website about either the Putin initiative or the meeting.

Syrian State media has also refrained from any reference, and there have no additional claims in al-Akhbar or as-Safir.

Meanwhile, Iran has grabbed the diplomatic initiative, hosting talks with Syrian Foreign Minister al-Moallem and the Russian Deputy Foreign Minister this week. Al-Moallem then traveled to Oman, which has been a broker on issues such as the negotiations over the Iranian nuclear program.

About The Author

Scott Lucas is Professor of International Politics at the University of Birmingham and editor-in-chief of EA WorldView. He is a specialist in US and British foreign policy and international relations, especially the Middle East and Iran. Formerly he worked as a journalist in the US, writing for newspapers including the Guardian and The Independent and was an essayist for The New Statesman before he founded EA WorldView in November 2008.